On Mon, 31 Dec 2012 21:58:35 -0500, Winslow <"Don L.
Winslow"@
pac.bell.net> wrote:
>On 12/31/2012 8:09 PM, Christopher A. Lee wrote:
>> On Mon, 31 Dec 2012 19:42:47 -0500, Winslow <"Don L.
>> Winslow"@
pac.bell.net> wrote:
>>
>>> On 12/31/2012 2:28 PM, Free Lunch wrote:
>>>> On Mon, 31 Dec 2012 14:19:41 -0500, Winslow <"Don L.r
>>>> Winslow"@
pac.bell.net> wrote in alt.talk.creationism:
>>>>
>>>>> On 9/26/2012 3:57 AM, Andrew wrote:
>>>>>> "Budikka666" wrote in message news:3304b2f3-eca0-4c75...@r7g2000yqa.googlegroups.com...
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Where's your evidence that there ever was a Jesus Christ, miracle-
>>>>>>> working son of a god?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Why don't you and I formally debate the evidence for his existence
>>>>>>> right here in this thread since you're blasphemous enough to claim you
>>>>>>> have a handle on the mind of your creator god?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Go ahead and post your five absolute best examples of *independent*
>>>>>>> *objective* evidence for the existenc eof the jesus depicte din the
>>>>>>> NT, and let's go at it, you and me.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> You should know that He is, since He is the One who loves you.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Although you may foolishly try to deny or resist it, His love for
>>>>>> you remains unchanged.
>>>>>>
>>>>> My question is, what could be seen as possible evidence creation?
>>>>
>>>> That is the responsibility of those trying to develop a hypothesis that
>>>> creation happened.
>>>>
>>>>> I am agnostic, in that I do not know whether there was a
>>>>> creation/creator or not. I've seen no proof either way.
There is no "either way" - that implies an unjustified equivalence
that gives the utterly baseless undeserved status.
>>>> A common fallacy for those who make excuses for the failure of fantasy
>>>> claims. The only valid null hypothesis is that a creator does not exist.
>>>> The duty of creationists is to disprove the null hypothesis if they want
>>>> to be taken seriously. They have failed.
>>>>
>>> A null hypothesis can never be proven. The alternative hypothesis,
>>> however, may be valid.
>>
>> I thought you were leaving.
> >
>I did. I was tired of "Jail Time....". So, I moved on to another
>topic.
Weaseling noted.
>> The methodology is that the null hypothesis stands until it is
>> DISproven.
>>
>> It's the way even agnostics treat other extraordinary claims - "No it
>> isn't, prove it".
>>
>> People were doing this long before Popper formalised it.
>>
>>>>> I use the word agnostic in the same sense as I don't know whether or not
>>>>> intelligent life exist anywhere in the universe other than the Earth.
>>>>
>>>> That may actually be a valid viewpoint. To apply it to a creator is not
>>>> valid.
>>>>
>>> If the first statement is valid, then except for a priori position which
>>> negates the second, it must be an equally valid point of view.
>>
>> If you had provided the kind of reasons to consider a god as there are
>> for considering life on other planets, you might have had a point.
> >
>You somehow miss the point, that it isn't about the existence of God
>but about agnosticism. One can be agnostic about intelligent life on
>other planets, or bigfoot, or UFOs. I don't know, and do not pretend
>to have knowledge I don't have. This is simple enough. Why don't you
>understand this?
I do not miss the point - which is that you claim to be agnostic about
things there is no reason even to consider, using "either way" as if
there were any equivalence between believing something extraordinary
when there is no reason to, and not even giving it a thought.
Why don't you understand this?
You miss the point.
You claim to be agnostic about things there is no reason even to
postulate.
>> We know life exists on at least one planet.
>>
>> We know of planets in other solar systems.
>>
>> We know that the basic building blocks of life can form naturally
>> under a wide variety of conditions.
>>
>> We know that simple proto-cells can form from these building blocks
>> using natural processes.
> >
>There is no evidence that these _proto-cells ever were present in the
>pre Cambrian.
But others were.
> They are lab creations with no possible way to posit
>them as the fore-runners of modern living cells. These lab creations
>only demonstrate what is possible given the right lab conditions and
>the education and intelligence to create these conditions.
They show that a supernatural creator isn't required.
And they were not the result of education and intelligence - the
simple processes were the application first of heat to amino acids and
then immersion of the residue in salt water.
They were discovered by happy accident not by planning.
>> On the other hand there is nothing whatsoever that suggests a god -
>> indeed the only reason to come up with it is one's pre-existing
>> religious belief.
> >
>No one has suggested a God actually exist.
You have yet to explain why you even give it a thought, let alone
elevate it to such a level that you give equal credence to "there is"
and "there isn't".
And why you imagine this is the only reasonable position.
>> Which has now been explained to you several times.
> >
>Explanations are opinions which can be accepted as valid or
>frivolous.
Bullshit.
>>>>> What is the best evidence for the existence of a Creator god?
>>>>
>>>> There is none.
>>>>
>>> Is this a verifiable fact? Does a widely accept authoritative
>>> explanation rule out any other possible explanation such as a
>>> supernatural explanation?
>>
>> It is a fact.
>>
>> Nothing remotely points in that direction, If there were,
>> philosophical "proofs" that try to generate information where there is
>> none, wouldn't be needed.
>>
>>> If so, does this not put science in a naturalistic straight jacket?
>>
>> Idiot.
> >
>I asked a question! If you continue this name calling I will refuse to
>read or respond to you.
Show some honesty for a change and actually address what you are told
instead of repeating the same old bullshit.
>>>>> Can the existence of a creator god be falsified?
>>>>
>>>> No need. The failure of those claiming that a creator god exists leaves
>>>> us with the null hypothesis, that there is no creator god.
>>>>
>>> The the question is: do you _know_ there is no creator god? Do you'know
>>> for an absolute fact that no God exist? (God is a general, all-inclusive
>>> generic term)
>>
>> You still can't think outside your theist box, no matter how often
>> this is explained...
> >
>My box is open, but you cannot think outside of your tightly closed
>materalistic box. Neither air nor light can get into your naturalistic box.
You really do need to stop lying.
>> This question doesn't even come up outside the theist's religion.
> >
>I should! Do you think you know everything? What percent (%) of
>what's known or will be discovered do you know: 90%, 50%, 25%, or less?
>If you don't know everything, then you cannot know whether or not God
>exist. This is where I stand.
Idiot.
>> Because outside it, this hypothetical creator God is merely somebody
>> else's religious belief.
>>
>> Do you have a mental block about this?
>>
>No, but I need to see positive proof that there is no Creator god.
Why do you imagine that is our problem, imbecile?
>Because one can never be sure!
In exactly the same way one can never be sure there isn't a teapot
orbiting Pluto, imbecile.
> These clever arguments, I see are
>merely a defense mechanisms. I have used them myself when confronting
>theists.
What "defence mechanisms" are you lying about, liar?